Abstract

We use Herschel Space Observatory data to place observational constraints on the peak and Rayleigh-Jeans slope of dust emission observed at 70-500 mu m in the nearby spiral galaxy M81. We find that the ratios of wave bands between 160 and 500 mu m are primarily dependent on radius but that the ratio of 70 to 160 mu m emission shows no clear dependence on surface brightness or radius. These results along with analyses of the spectral energy distributions imply that the 160-500 mu m emission traces 15-30 K dust heated by evolved stars in the bulge and disc whereas the 70 mu m emission includes dust heated by the active galactic nucleus and young stars in star forming regions